Prison smarts
M.W. Guzy looks at the crime data as a basis for discussing plans to reduce the numbers of inmates. The numbers weren't what he expected.
M.W. Guzy looks at the crime data as a basis for discussing plans to reduce the numbers of inmates. The numbers weren't what he expected.
The voters are evidently satisfied with the earnings tax. But M.W. Guzy notes that the strange bedfellows of Rex Sinquefield and Francis Slay are looking at alternatives to a fair and once-again growing revenue source.
Shocked by the relatively light sentences in the city towing-lot scandal? M.W. Guzy explains why you shouldn't be.
M.W. Guzy discusses the St. Louis murder rate. Yes, the statistical ranking in violent crime may be explained away; but the murder rate is still high and demands action.
M.W. Guzy says Proposition C might not pass constitutional review, but the same can be said of the national health-care law it attacks.
Perhaps now that Missouri ranks dead last in the nation in taxes extracted from the sale of cancer sticks, M.W. Guzy wonders whether citizens would be willing to raise the cigarette tax.
St. Louis\' self image has steadily declined since the days of being first in shoes and first in booze. Now, the city has settled into a sort of genteel pessimism that only sees clouds - no silver linings. And M.W. Guzy says the lack of confidence
Death may be inevitable, but taxes ... well, M.W.Guzy notes that Leona Helmsley may have been right when she said, "Only the little people pay taxes."
Some city police scandals center around abuse, financial corruption and drugs. St. Louis' centers on a Dodge Neon. For a financial scandal, look at the actions of the Police Board trying to control costs by cutting retirees health insurance.